Pintupi Country, Pintupi Painting
Since starting this blog, I've been spending a
good deal of time re-reading Fred Myers' publications on Western Desert art and
culture. Browsing through the concluding chapter of
Pintupi Country, Pintupi Self: sentiment, place and
politics among Western Desert
Aborigines recently, I was struck by
a paragraph in which Myers contrasts concepts of social organization among the
Pintupi and the Warlpiri. The Pintupi emphasis on negotiating connectedness
across a large geographical territory in contrast to the Warlpiri transmission
of rights to country through inheritance led me to an insight about certain
recent stylistic developments in Pintupi men's painting that I want to explore
in this essay.Pintupi
Country, Pintupi Self is one of the most often
cited works in the canon of contemporary Aboriginal studies. In it, Myers
attempts to describe, from the point of view of the lived perspective of the
Pintupi themselves, the underpinnings of their social relations and social
identity. He posits a fundamental tension in that society between what he
calls “relatedness” and “autonomy,” and which I take to
represent, respectively, “Pintupi country” and “Pintupi
self.” Here is Myers’ own summary, from the book's final
chapter:One concern [of the study] is the relationship between the negotiated quality of Pintupi daily life and a regional system based on extensive ties of shared identity. The emphasis in Pintupi social action on negotiation and sustaining relatedness contrasts strongly with the clarity of "rules" and "norms" as reported in ethnographic descriptions of other well-known Aboriginal groups. In this respect Meggitt's [M. I. Meggitt, Desert People: a study of the Walbiri Aborigines of Central Australia , Universty of Chicago Press] (1962) presentation of the Warlpiri in terms of a structural-functional framework provides an important case. (Myers, Pintupi Country, Pintupi Self, 286) To
oversimplify somewhat, autonomy is the state to which Pintupi men aspire as they
become adults. As children and as young men, before their initiation is
complete, men are dependent upon older men--fathers and older brothers, both
consanguinal and by virtue of kinship rules--for sustenance and knowledge. As
they pass through the stages of initiation, they are required to hunt and
provide food for the older men and later gain permission to marry and become
fathers themselves. Perhaps more importantly, they are granted increasing
knowledge of the Dreaming and of
ritual.Identification with particular
Dreaming sites can have many bases in Pintupi society. One may claim
affiliation on the basis of being conceived at a site, or born there. A site
where one's father died, or one's grandfather, may also be a source of identity.
Since Pintupi may travel widely over the course of years, these sites may be
widely distanced in the desert. Other men who are not family members may have
similar claims to these same sites. An individual's claim to belong to a place
and the strength of that claim vis-a-vis those of other men depends in part on
knowledge of ritual associated with the site. These claims are the occasion for
much of the negotiation that Myers see as critical to the foundations of Pintupi
society. Autonomy, as a defensible claim, rests on knowledge of
ritual.As noted above, such knowledge
is given to young men through the extended process of initiation. The process
and ritual of initiation, in addition to “growing up” men, serves to
create and reinforce bonds of relatedness across Pintupi country. When a young
man is ready to be initiated, he is sent in the company of older male relatives
to geographically distant communities, where participants in the ceremonies will
be invited to attend. Some of those who come from far away will have important
roles to play, but all who participate will share a bond from the simple fact of
coming together for such an important event. Men who perform the circumcision
will be in the kin status of brothers-in-law to the initiate, later providing
him with a wife and further strengthening the ties of relatedness across the
country. Once past the first stages of the process, the young novices are
secluded from their families and sent out on further travels. During these
post-initiatory journeys they visit sacred sites, learn more of the Dreaming
rituals, and continue to create and sustain ties with remote country. The
mythic model for these journeys, of course, is the travels of the Tingari, which
form the subject of much of Pintupi
painting.The knowledge gained on these
travels gives the youth the beginnings of adult status in his community and
family, and is the first step towards life as an autonomous, independent man.
Once fully initiated, he will in turn take on responsibility for growing up
other men and continuing the cycle of obligation to country and relatedness,
while at the same time increasing his personal authority and autonomy. By
visiting sacred sites and obtaining ritual knowledge, he is better able to stand
with stature among other men and make a stronger claim to affiliation with those
sites.Among the Warlpiri, in contrast,
the "possession" of Dreamings is much more structured and determined largely on
the basis of patrifiliation: one inherits one's Dreaming from male ancestors.
Put another way (using Myers' terms), Pintupi sociality has a stronger basis in
events,
and Warlpiri in
rights.
For the Pintupi,
process
is the defining element of their vision, where the Warlpiri rely more on
categories
to provide structure to their view of the world. Although the Pintupi have most
probably adopted the eight-subsection "skin name" model of kinship organization
form the Warlpiri, it is a more highly structured, categorical affair among the
Warlpiri, where there are strongly defined categorical links between skin
groups: the Possum Dreaming from the Granites area, for example belongs to the
Jakamarra/Jupurrula subsections, and the Native Cat to the Japaljarri/Jungurrayi
men. These pairings of skin groups are unknown among the Pintupi. Since rights
to Dreamings among the Pintupi have a much more direct relationship to life
events, rather than to inheritance, one may find that men of several different
subsections can make claims to affiliation with a given
site.At this point, I am going to
leave Myers behind and strike out on a limb of my own to speculate how all this
might inform Warlpiri and especially Pintupi painting. Let me begin, for the
sake of contrast, with Warlpiri painting, in an admittedly unscientific
sample.Among Warlpiri painters from
Yuendumu and Lajamanu, there seems to be a pattern of painters repeatedly
depicting a particular dreaming. Abie Jangala's work largely concerns Rain
Dreamings; many of Paddy Japaljarri Sims' paintings are Milky Way Dreamings, and
Paddy Japaljarri Stewart frequently paints Native Cat and Possum Dreamings.
Although each of these dreamings is obviously associated with a geographical
site, what is given primacy among Warlpiri explanations is the "myth," or the
story. Documentation for these paintings from Warlukurlangku Artists often says
something to the effect that "the Dreaming belongs to Japaljarri/Jungurrayi men
and Napaljarri/Nungurrayi women." The stories and the Dreamings are inherited,
and ownership is much more clear-cut than among the
Pintupi.Pictorially, these paintings
employ what is considered "classic" Western Desert iconography: U shapes to
represent people sitting, the circle as campsite or fire, sinuous lines that
show water courses or falling rain, and so on. In
Walbiri Iconography: graphic representation and cultural
symbolism in a Central Australian society
(Cornell University Press, 1973), Nancy Munn
has documented how these symbols have multiple levels of meaning in the Warlpiri
graphic system: a waterhole, so to speak, is not always a waterhole. Here again
though, we are confronted with the notion of categories, as symbols for
campsites or waterholes may also reference aspects of women’s life. (see
Myers, 293)Among the Pintupi, the
dominant narrative motif is, of course, the Tingari cycle with its extensive
wanderings of the ancestors. And while early Pintupi paintings employed much
the same graphic vocabulary as the Warlpiri system does, over the last decade or
more, we have seen a decreasing dependence on that vocabulary and the emergence
of a dominant mode of expression that is more overtly geographical in its
nature. The circle-and-line motif of early Tingari paintings, such as the
masterpiece by Willy Tjungurrayi that is more or less permanently on display in
the Yirbana Gallery of the Art Gallery of New South Wales, has given way in
recent years to the artist's simpler "sandhill" designs that have been
represented in the Sotheby's auctions this
year.A painting by Charlie Tjapangarti
from 2005 (CT0504151) is an exemplar of much Pintupi painting
today. (Copyright
2005 by the artist, and reproduced by permission of Papunya Tula Artists Pty.
Ltd.)The essential part of the
documentation for this painting reads as
follows:This painting depicts designs associated with the swamp and rockhole site of Palipalintjanya, just west of Jupiter Well. In mythological times a large group of Tingari men camped at this site before travelling south, then turning east passing through Wala Wala, Kiwirrkura and then north-east to Tarkul and Wilkinkarra (Lake Mackay). Pictorially,
we have here a simple depiction of the rockhole and swamp country, but it is
meant to stand for the starting point of a journey of hundreds of kilometers.
Indeed, the organization of the pictorial space appears to reinforce this
notion. The painting is anchored in the upper left-hand corner by the spiraling
depiction of the rockhole. The design thrusts outward from that starting point
toward the bottom edge of the frame before turning around in the right half of
the canvas. The strong diagonal in the upper right hand corner leads the eye
outward, beyond the frame. In the orientation of the painting as shown above,
the flow of the lines even mimics the directional path of the Tingari described
in the documentation, beginning with a "southward" motion away from the rockhole
and ultimately pointing "northeast."
Unlike Warlpiri paintings that encode
multiple levels of meaning, the Pintupi strategy is a graphical synecdoche where
a part stands for the larger whole. The painter asserts his connection to the
primary site of Palipalintjanya, but implies connections to the other locales
associated with this segment of the Tingari travels. Given that Papunya Tula
has deliberately downplayed extensive documentation of the "stories" since
Andrew Crocker's time (Myers, Painting
Culture, 158) and that the
"business" of the Tingari cycle is secret/sacred, I find it suggestive that what
information is provided about the background to the painting emphasizes the
geographical connections that are the heart of the Pintupi concept of
relatedness.The Pintupi long ago
retreated from the depiction of ritual elements themselves, and of particularly
"dangerous" sacred business, that appeared in some of early paintings. In part
this resulted from complaints raised by Pitjantjatjarra men who saw sacred
designs, painted by Pintupi men, on exhibition in Perth in 1975
(Pintupi Country, Pintupi
Self, 166; see also
Painting
Culture, 65-66). The great line-and-circle
designs that filled the large canvases of the 80's were less overtly
representational, and derived from elements of the Tingari cycle that were less
restricted. The trend toward a more spare pictorial design has characterized
Pintupi art since the early 90's (in my view: see the entry on The Painter in Alice Springs for more on that
opinion).Myers argues that the
"relationship between the negotiated quality of Pintupi daily life and a
regional system based on extensive ties of shared identity" is core to the
Pintupi experience. I suggest that the "negotiation" finds expression in the
subject matter of Pintupi painting: that when Charlie Tjapangarti (for example)
chooses the sites he represents in a painting, he is making an assertion about
his rights to those sites and that country. In the sense that Pintupi political
life is fundamentally concerned with rights to country, these paintings are
personal and political statements. And I wonder if they are both subtler and
more complex than the simple statement, "That's my
Dreaming."The politics to which I have
referred, following on Myers' subtitle, "sentiment, place, and politics among
Western Desert Aborigines," are essentially the politics of a pre-contact era.
They concern what we consider to be traditional social issues relating to
resources, land use, and interpersonal relations. But in asserting these rights
to country, are the Pintupi not also taking part in the great Australian
political debate about Land Rights? Considered in this regard, these paintings'
expressions are equally relevant to pre-contact and to 21st century life.
Perhaps all this amounts to not much more than the fundamental lesson that the
relationship of people to land is at the heart of Aboriginal culture, but Myers'
framing of the issues has given these paintings new depth for
me.
Posted: Sat
- November 26, 2005 at 12:17 PM
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A collection of personal reflections and readings on the art of the indigenous people of Australia, their culture, anthropological studies, the art market, and whatever else strays across the cultural horizon.
If you don't wish to leave comments on the blog itself please fee free to contact me directly. Will Owen
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Published On: Jul 22, 2007 09:19 AM
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